The Sunday Telegraph, the Independent on Sunday and The Observer eschew puns. They went respectively with "History man", "The greatest" and "I've done it again."

All the papers use roughly the same picture, the one showing a wide-eyed Farah breaking the tape and touching the top of his bald head.

Oddly, The People doesn't even have a mention of the Olympics on its front, going instead with a big blurb for its football coverage and a splash about the murder of 12-year-old Tia Sharp.

I know The People's masthead slogan says "proud to be independent" but I doubt their independence will attract extra readers this morning.

The papers use the peg of Farah's winning of two gold medals to reflect on Team GB's success and the overall success of the London Games. And there's plenty of chauvinism and hyperbole!

Example one: Cole Moreton in the Sunday Telegraph wrote: "The greatest Olympics of all time came towards a perfect end last night as Mo Farah won his second gold of the London Games."

The Sunday Times said: "It was fitting that it fell to Farah to set the seal on the penultimate day of the Olympics as he was part of British athletes' finest hour when they won three golds in less than an hour last Saturday."

The Mail on Sunday was ecstatic: "Chariots of Farah! Double medallist Mo adds his Midas touch as GB pick up THREE more golds... and Daley scoops bronze in final night."

And the Sunday Express, in hailing Farah's victory, said: "Team GB's golden odyssey continued last night with more victory medals added to our record-breaking tally."

The Sun, not to be outdone, said: "The stunning golden double detonated an explosion of joy which raised the roof of the Olympic stadium — and surged the length and breadth of the nation." Farah's success has "virtually assured" Britain's third place in the medal table.

Will Hutton in The Observer urged us to learn a political lesson: "The best haul of medals in 104 years is no accident," he wrote. "It is the result of rejecting the world of public disengagement and laissez faire that delivered one paltry gold medal in Atlanta just 16 years ago.

Instead, British sport embraced a new framework of sustained public investment and organised purpose... The lesson is simple. If we could do the same for economy and society, rejecting the principles that have made us economic also-rans and which the coalition has put at the centre of its economic policy, Britain could be at the top of the economic league table within 20 years."